Is Posting Art Online Breaching Digital Property Rights?

Facebook and other sites like Pinterest as
well as Instagram are all great places for us to display your artwork. If you
are a graphic designer, then you should have your artwork on a website with
digital copyright enabled for your images. Then you need to also show off your
work over social media. I mean why would you not do this? Social media and
having a website with a portfolio is always going to help your potential or
current customers see your skills.

Although, there is one risk involved in
making your art publicly available online. Google images display your artwork
under its images section. This is there for anyone to copy and place on their
website if they want to. Most websites that supply examples of images and
artwork like Shutterstock will place watermarks over the images so you cannot
copy them directly. This is exactly what you should be doing with all of your
own artwork if you can.

lemigliorivpn.com

On the other hand, if you want to show off
digital graphic design artwork you have created for customers, then most of the
time you need to lead your social media and website visitors to your client
website so they can see your skill for themselves. Well, the issue then
remerges in that anyone can just copy those images and place it on their site.
Google and Yahoo still index the images and Facebook certainly does not check
to see whether people own the graphics they post on its social network.

In fact, I got so annoyed with my artwork
turning up all over Facebook that I ended up deleting my Facebook account out
of frustration. I used this website to help me eliminate
account facebook because I am French, so this is translated to delete
facebook account. I mean I could find my images using software that was being
resold by other agencies or used on Facebook advertising campaigns. Facebook
ignored my complaints so it was time to delete my account because people
following my account were just stealing my work.

I had to reopen a new Facebook account and
link this to my business. The hassle of reproducing my Facebook business page
was also quite time-consuming. After this, all my graphic design comes with a
watermark on it and a copyright warning. This has so far worked to some extent,
but not to the extent I hoped it would. At least now my artwork is not being
stolen as much and touted across Facebook by people that simply followed me
because they knew that they could just steal my work.

Instagram has always been really good about
copyright. As soon as I complain to them, they get the users to take down the
artwork. If you want to find out how to delete a Facebook account “come eliminare account
facebook” in my native French tongue, then check out my
suggestions.

As for Google indexing my images and putting those on
display, some of my older images are still there, which is quite annoying to
the say the least. On the other hand, at least now Google also indexes my
images that have watermarks on them, so I do not look like an easy target any
longer.